IDF Embraces Syrian Islamist Extremists

If the Israeli government isn’t paying big bucks to Daniel Pipes to advise it on strategic military-political policy, it should be. When the Syrian civil war first began, Pipes wrote that Israel should favor whichever side was losing and hope both sides fought each other to a bloody stalemate. The more Arab blood spilled the better. It was a classic iteration of the British colonial “divide and conquer” strategy. To further your own control, you set all the factions and sects against each other. You ultimately side with the less powerful group and give it just enough support to ensure stalemate with the most powerful ethnic group. That way you keep the ‘natives’ at bay and yourself in control. If you’re afraid of an external neighboring, encourage instability and unrest by supporting dissident groups.

This is precisely what Israel has done regarding Iran, where the Mossad funded domestic terror by the MeK and the Sunni group, Jundallah. Meir Dagan, in an interview I featured here, spoke explicitly of this as an attempt to sabotage Iran’s government so that it would be a weaker rival. A modified version of this is operative in Syria as well. Israel’s goal is not to live in peace with its neighbors, but to ensure they are perpetually weak and divided.

Though in the beginning it appeared the Syrian rebels might have the upper hand, within the past year momentum has shifted to the regime. Israel, while claiming neutrality has, almost from the beginning, intervened against Assad. This is less because of what Assad represents, and much more because his chief allies are Israel’s sworn enemies, Iran and Hezbollah.

Until recently, Israeli intervention mainly took the form of air attacks which attempted to destroy advanced Russian or Iranian weapons systems transiting Syria on their way to Hezbollah in Lebanon. Israeli war planes attacked such weapons convoys and installations at least six times over the past year or more. Another facet of Israeli intervention has been continuing collaboration between IDF special forces and Syrian Druze rebels. Over a year ago, FoxNews reported an Israeli unit crossed the border to liaise with Golani Druze rebels..

In the past month, UN peacekeeping forces have noted equally unusual IDF activity on or near the border. I’ve already posted about the establishment of what appears to be an Islamist rebel base under Israeli protection and directly on the border. They’ve also noted packages of what appear to be military supplies ferried over the border by the IDF into Syria. What’s astonishing about this is which rebels Israel is helping. They are not the Free Syrian Army, known as a “moderate” entity within the rebel movement, as it appears largely a spent force. Instead, they’re allied with the al-Nusra Front, a former Al Qaeda affiliate. A number of media outlets have reported this. But the most recent is one from Le Canard Enchaine, which claims to be based on French intelligence sources. The story says that Israel is supplying ‘military hardware’ to the Islamist movement.

Remember this the next time you hear Bibi Netanyahu blather on about Islamist extremism lurking on Israel’s borders. If Islamism truly threatens Israel, why is Israel making common cause with it? If the Islamists were to win the war and took over Syria, how long would it be before al-Nusra turned its sights on Israel itself? Such phenomena have already happened in Israel’s history with regional Islamism. As I’ve written here, neither Hezbollah nor Hamas would have swept to prominence and power as quickly without crucial early assistance from Israeli intelligence. In both cases, Israel’s strategy was to sabotage the power of Fatah within Palestinian and Lebanese societies. The same process could happen in Syria.

The difference is that Israel doesn’t want al Nusra to win the war. It wants the rebels to fight the regime to a stalemate. If it found the rebels winning it might turn around and aid Assad. It’s purely cynical self-interest as defined by which of two scuzzy enemies is least bad.

In this Maariv report, Jackie Hugi ponders a related important question: if ISIS and al-Nusra are the confirmed Islamists they claim, why aren’t they attacking Israel? For example, I’ve speculated here that ISIS must’ve had some inkling that Israeli-American captive, Steven Sotloff, was Jewish. Yet in none of its propaganda did it refer to this. I believe there are strategic reasons why it didn’t. Right now, Islamists have their eyes on the prize that is most important to them: battling their Shiite adversaries in Syria and Iraq. They know that if they succeed there is plenty of time later to turn their attention to other enemies. But taking on Shiites AND Israel is too much for anyone to handle. Here is Hugi:

These contacts [between the IDF and rebels] go some way to explaining why the armed rebels take pains not to attack Israel. At this time, they have a greater goal: to topple Assad and establish their rule in territory they liberated from him. If they perform acts of terror against Israel they will create a second enemy, greater and more dangerous than the Syrian regime, which could bring upon them disaster.

It’s possible that in future, if they succeed in their mission, they will change this policy. But in the meantime, the establishment of contacts with Israel is an important part of creating a permanent institutionalized presence in the region.

…Jerusalem must ask itself some difficult questions: can its bet on the rebels pay off? Or does stability on the northern border depend on the continuation of the regime? Support for these sectarian groups carries many dangers. Their trustworthiness fluctuates, as do the figures who lead them. He who today will not act against Israel may change his spots [literally “shed his skin”] tomorrow.

…Israeli policy over the past few decades has been characterized by a series of bad bets. At the end of the 1980s, it enabled Hamas to rise from the midst of Gaza’s Islamist groups. It did this out of the flawed assumption that this was the proper way to weaken Fatah…As a result [Israel] created its own Trojan Horse [within Palestine].

With the IDF’s entrance [sic] into Lebanon in 1982, Israel disregarded the Shiites and rushed to ally itself with those it saw as the most powerful in the land: the Christians. So it paved the way for Teheran to offer protection to the disadvantaged and enable the rise of Hezbollah.

Today, sometimes it seems like Israel doesn’t realize the advantages of the [Syrian] regime.

When you watch the Vice hasbara video above touting the IDF’s humanitarian work caring for seriously wounded Syrian rebels, remember the reason they’re doing this. First, to curry favor with world media. But even more importantly, to conceal the budding military-intelligence alliance with former Al Qaeda fighters. Israel and Islamists conniving together against Assad is bad optics. There’s nothing noble or altruistic about it, though the Vice reporter allows his viewers to believe this. The cynicism inherent in the gesture points to the Likudists making common cause with an enemy whose ideology they detest, but with whom it’s worth doing business to advance temporary national interests.

So let me be the still small voice of morality here: if you believe your cause is just and even noble, when you lie down with monsters, you wake up with an indelible stain. Everything good you represent is turned to dust.

Finally, there is only one “good” thing to be said for al Nusra–they’re not ISIS.

@RAMBO: Sorry bud but my blog deals with Israel. It does not deal as primary subjects with those you view as the world’s greatest enemies. My job here is not to satisfy your needs or interests, especially since I don’t share them, but my own.

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3 years ago

RAMBO

Yes, no question this is your blog so you are entitled to do that. But what about some openness to other views, tolerance of different perspectives, breadth of vision, open debates and so and on – many nice objectives that we have been brought up upon? Where have they gone?

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3 years ago

Figg

Richard.

The VICE news report said that 10% of the casualties that Israel treats are women and children.
Three of the Syrian fighters being treated by Israel were Free Syrian Army fighters. The ‘good guys’.
Two Syrian regime pilots recently parachuted into Israel after their jet was destroyed and were treated and returned to Syria.

@ Figg: Israeli aid is never neutral & never humanitarian. It is always based on purely cynical, parochial motives.

I listened to the video & never heard anyone claim the wounded fighters were FSA. In fact, FSA is not active on the border so I don’t see how that could be true.

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3 years ago

Figg

I believe the FSA fighter is interviewed in Part Two of the five part series. He is being interviewed in his hospital bed and the caption clearly states that he is FSA. He is the fighter with the leg wounds. He states that he and his two comrades were wounded and driven to the border.

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3 years ago

Figg

Yup. Part Two of the series, @ 4:30. The wounded fighter identifies himself as Free Syrian Army.

Figg: These sources are old comparatively. August and September are a world away from today in terms of Syrian battlefield conditions.

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3 years ago

Figg

@Mr. Richard Silverstein

I do not wish to violate your ‘monopolizing’ rule. Before parting from this thread let me close by saying that the VICE reporter interviewing the ‘FSA’ fighters said that this group of fighters were admitted to the Israeli hospital in July, 2014.

BTW, The generalissimo of the FSA, Col. Abdullah al-Bashir, was treated for his wounds in Israel.

Have a great holiday.

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3 years ago

Elisabeth

“The VICE news report said that 10% of the casualties that Israel treats are women and children.”

Where does it say so? It says 90% of the people treated were men.
The majority of the victims in this war are not men though…

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3 years ago

Ariel

A commenter on Rotter.net (not the most reliable source but stil…) wrote that the help al-nausea receives, which is mostly medical, is given to ensure they leave us alone. They are now on our borders and an occasional mortar fire into Israel can severely disrupt civilians life on the Golan Heights. Give extremists some medical/humaneterian aid is a well paid prize to pay to reduce our involvement to the minimum. All the sources you brought point at local assistance beyond bombing allegedly Hizbollah supplies which are a very different story, I hope you’ll agree.
The monster-stein comment is almost childish. Adults know that in life some choices aren’t between ‘good and evil’ but rather between ‘bad and worse’ or in this case ‘worse and worst’.

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3 years ago

Deïr Yassin

“the help al-nausea receives”
A Freudian slip ? US help to The-Only-Democracy ?
The Al-Qaïda-affiliated group is al-Nusra Front aka la Cosa Nostra in Syria.

@ Ariel: Only a hasbara specialist like you would deem morality to be “childish.” What you mean to say is that having to hear Israel denounced for its immoral choices is so damn annoying that you’d prefer to dismiss the issue with the non sequitur calling it “childish.”

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3 years ago

Ariel

RS – Calling me ‘hasbara specialist’ doesn’t change the facts or dismisses my point.
Israel had done ‘worse’ before when it was necessary. Releasing over 1000 militants in exchange for 1 soldier is considered just as bad by many and have already caused casualties (Baruch Mizrachi for example) and you deerly supported that.

@ Ariel: I didn’t “support” anything “deerly” [sic] or otherwise. What I support is Israel living within 67 borders, sharing Jerusalem & recognizing the Right of Return. Short of this, everything else is cosmetic & non-fundamental. Focussing on prisoner exchanges or any other matters that are short of a full peace agreement, is the art of hasbara digression.
Your “points” are automatically “dismissed” even before you write them. You don’t have any points to offer.

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3 years ago

Ariel

RS – Looking again at your article – you’re right, you didn’t shot support in the Shalit case just commented on it. I misread the headline.

Back to the point – inability to see Grey just Black&White make life easy to determine but impossible to act upon.

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3 years ago

dror

[comment deleted: you are new to commenting at this blog. Please read the comment rules & try to keep your comments on topic. This isn’t the time or place to get into a disputation about the Right of Return, which I’ve discussed in blog posts here–but not this one. Your point of view has been raised and rebutted numerous times, so I don’t want to wade into this one more time.]

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